98-9869. Anti-circumvention Inquiry of the Antidumping Duty Order on Certain Pasta From Italy: Affirmative Preliminary Determination of Circumvention of the Antidumping Duty Order  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 72 (Wednesday, April 15, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 18364-18366]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-9869]
    
    
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    DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
    
    International Trade Administration
    [A-475-818]
    
    
    Anti-circumvention Inquiry of the Antidumping Duty Order on 
    Certain Pasta From Italy: Affirmative Preliminary Determination of 
    Circumvention of the Antidumping Duty Order
    
    AGENCY: Import Administration, International Trade Administration, 
    Department of Commerce.
    
    ACTION: Notice of Affirmative Preliminary Determination of 
    Circumvention of Antidumping Duty Order.
    
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    SUMMARY: On October 23, 1997, the Department of Commerce received an 
    allegation of circumvention of the antidumping duty order on certain 
    pasta from Italy. Pursuant to that allegation, the Department of 
    Commerce initiated an anti-circumvention inquiry on December 8, 1997.
        We preliminarily determine that certain pasta produced in Italy by 
    Barilla S.r.L. (Barilla) and exported to the United States in packages 
    of greater than five pounds, which subsequently are repackaged in the 
    United States into packages of five pounds or less, constitute 
    circumvention of the antidumping duty order on certain pasta from 
    Italy, within the meaning of section 781(a) of the Tariff Act of 1930, 
    as amended, and 19 CFR 351.225(g). Interested parties are invited to 
    comment on this preliminary determination.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: April 15, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Edward Easton or John Brinkmann, 
    Import Administration, International Trade Administration, U.S. 
    Department of Commerce, 14th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW, 
    Washington, DC 20230; telephone: (202) 482-1777 or (202) 482-5288, 
    respectively.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Applicable Statute and Regulations
    
        Unless otherwise indicated, all citations to the statute are 
    references to the provisions effective January 1, 1995, the effective 
    date of the amendments made to the Tariff Act of 1930 (the Act) by the 
    Uruguay Round Agreements Act. In addition, unless otherwise indicated, 
    all citations to the regulations of the Department of Commerce (the 
    Department) are to the regulations as codified at 19 CFR part 351, 62 
    FR 27295 (May 19, 1997).
    
    [[Page 18365]]
    
    Background
    
        Since the initiation of this anti-circumvention inquiry on December 
    8, 1997 (see Initiation of Anti-Circumvention Inquiry on Antidumping 
    Duty Order on Certain Pasta from Italy, 62 FR 65673 (December 15, 1997) 
    (Notice of Initiation), the following events have occurred:
        On January 2, 1998, the Department issued a questionnaire to 
    Barilla. On the day that Barilla's response was due (February 9, 1998), 
    Barilla informed the Department that it would not respond to our 
    questionnaire.
        On January 16, 1998, Barilla proposed a certification scheme which 
    it states would enable the Department to exclude bulk pasta that is not 
    to be repackaged after importation, e.g., bulk pasta shipped directly 
    to institutional or food service users. Specifically, each of Barilla's 
    independent distributors would certify that it would (1) resell all 
    pasta purchased from Barilla in the packaging in which the pasta was 
    delivered to it, and (2) would not repack any pasta in packages greater 
    than five pounds (hereafter referred to as bulk pasta) into packages of 
    five pounds or less. At the Department's request, the U.S. Customs 
    Service (Customs) transmitted to the Department its initial comments on 
    Barilla's proposed certification program on February 23, 1998 (see 
    Memorandum to the File dated March 31, 1998).
        On February 13, 1998, the petitioners filed a response to Barilla's 
    January 16 and February 9 letters. The petitioners argued that, given 
    Barilla's failure to respond to the Department's questionnaire, the 
    Department should immediately issue an affirmative circumvention ruling 
    and suspend liquidation on entries of bulk pasta by Barilla. The 
    petitioners also stated that they did not oppose Barilla's proposed 
    certification scheme, but have urged the Department to adopt any such 
    certification scheme for all importers of bulk pasta. Barilla submitted 
    rebuttal comments on February 20, 1998.
    
    Scope of Antidumping Duty Order
    
        The merchandise currently subject to the antidumping order is 
    certain non-egg dry pasta in packages of five pounds (2.27 kilograms) 
    or less, whether or not enriched or fortified or containing milk or 
    other optional ingredients such as chopped vegetables, vegetable 
    purees, milk, gluten, diastases, vitamins, coloring and flavorings, and 
    up to two percent egg white. The pasta covered by this scope is 
    typically sold in the retail market, in fiberboard or cardboard cartons 
    or polyethylene or polypropylene bags, of varying dimensions.
        Excluded from the scope of the order are refrigerated, frozen, or 
    canned pastas, as well as all forms of egg pasta, with the exception of 
    non-egg dry pasta containing up to two percent egg white. Also excluded 
    are imports of organic pasta from Italy that are accompanied by the 
    appropriate certificate issued by the Instituto Mediterraneo Di 
    Certificazione (IMC), by Bioagricoop Scrl, or by QC&I International 
    Services. Furthermore, multicolored pasta imported in kitchen display 
    bottles of decorative glass, which are sealed with cork or paraffin and 
    bound with raffia, is excluded from the scope of this order.
        The merchandise under order is currently classifiable under item 
    1902.19.20 of the Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the United States 
    (HTSUS). Although the HTSUS subheading is provided for convenience and 
    customs purposes, the written description of the merchandise under 
    order is dispositive.
    
    Scope of the Anti-Circumvention Inquiry
    
        The product subject to this anti-circumvention inquiry is certain 
    pasta produced in Italy by Barilla and exported to the United States in 
    packages of greater than five pounds (2.27 kilograms) that meets all 
    the requirements for the merchandise subject to the antidumping duty 
    order, with the exception of packaging size, and which is repackaged 
    into packages of five pounds (2.27 kilograms) or less after entry into 
    the United States.
    
    Nature of the Anti-Circumvention Inquiry
    
        Section 781(a)(1) of the Act provides that the Department, after 
    taking into account any advice provided by the United States 
    International Trade Commission (ITC) under section 781(e) of the Act, 
    may include the imported merchandise under review within the scope of 
    an order if the following criteria have been met: (A) The merchandise 
    sold in the United States is of the same class or kind as any other 
    merchandise that is the subject to the antidumping duty order; (B) such 
    merchandise sold in the United States is completed or assembled in the 
    United States from parts or components produced in the foreign country 
    with respect to which such order applies; (C) the process of assembly 
    or completion in the United States is minor or insignificant; and (D) 
    the value of the parts or components produced in the foreign country to 
    which the antidumping duty order applies is a significant portion of 
    the total value of the merchandise sold in the United States.
        Section 781(a)(3) of the Act further provides that, in determining 
    whether to include parts or components in the order, the Department 
    shall consider: (1) The pattern of trade, including sourcing patterns; 
    (2) whether the manufacturer or exporter of the parts or components is 
    affiliated with the person who assembles or completes the merchandise 
    sold in the United States; and (3) whether imports into the United 
    States of the parts or components produced in such foreign country have 
    increased after the initiation of the investigation which resulted in 
    the issuance of such order or finding.
        The Department's questionnaire, transmitted to Barilla on January 
    2, 1998, was designed to elicit information for purposes of conducting 
    both qualitative and quantitative analyses in accordance with the 
    criteria enumerated at section 781(a) of the Act. This approach is 
    consistent with our analysis in previous anti-circumvention inquiries. 
    See, e.g., Certain Carbon Steel Butt-Weld Pipe Fittings from the 
    People's Republic of China; Affirmative Final Determination of 
    Circumvention of Antidumping Duty Order, 59 FR 15155 (March 31, 1994). 
    For the Department to ascertain the value of the completed merchandise 
    sold in the United States, we requested that Barilla provide cost data 
    relevant to the production of pasta produced in Italy that is 
    repackaged and sold in the United States as well as the costs 
    associated with for the processing and repackaging operations performed 
    in the United States. Barilla, however, refused to provide any of the 
    information requested in the Department's questionnaire.
    
    Affirmative Preliminary Determination of Circumvention
    
        For the reasons described below, we preliminarily determine that 
    circumvention of the antidumping duty order on certain pasta from Italy 
    is occurring by reason of exports of bulk pasta from Italy produced by 
    Barilla which subsequently are repackaged in the United States into 
    packages of five pounds or less for sale in the United States.
    
    Facts Available
    
        Section 776(a) of the Act requires the Department to resort to 
    facts otherwise available if necessary information is not available on 
    the record or when an interested party or any other person fails to 
    provide (requested) information by the deadlines for submission of the 
    information or in the form and manner
    
    [[Page 18366]]
    
    requested, subject to subsections (c)(1) and (e) of section 782. As 
    provided in section 782(c)(1) of the Act, if an interested party, 
    promptly after receiving a request from [the Department] for 
    information, notifies [the Department] that such party is unable to 
    submit the information requested in the requested form and manner, the 
    Department may modify the requirements to avoid imposing an 
    unreasonable burden on that party. Since Barilla did not provide any 
    such notification to the Department, subsection (c)(1) does not apply 
    to this situation. Furthermore, since Barilla failed to respond to the 
    Department's questionnaire, we must base the preliminary determination 
    in this inquiry on the facts otherwise available.
        Section 776(b) of the Act permits the Department to use an 
    inference that is adverse to the interests of an interested party if 
    that party has failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its 
    ability to comply with a request for information. Because Barilla 
    refused to comply with the Department's request for information, we 
    find that Barilla failed to cooperate by not acting to the best of its 
    ability to comply with the Department's request. Barilla's refusal to 
    respond to our questionnaire impedes our ability not only to determine 
    if circumvention of the antidumping duty order is occurring, but also 
    to distinguish between its bulk imports for repackaging and any bulk 
    imports which may have been exempt from the scope of the antidumping 
    duty order. Therefore, the adverse inference we are relying upon in 
    accordance with section 776(b) of the Act is that Barilla has been 
    exporting pasta in bulk packages to the United States, where it has 
    been repackaged into what would have been subject merchandise had it 
    been imported directly. The Statement of Administrative Action (SAA), 
    which accompanied the Uruguay Round Agreements Act, H.R. Doc. No. 316, 
    103rd Congress, 2nd Session (1994) (URAA), states that information used 
    to make an adverse inference may include such sources as the petition, 
    other information placed on the record, or determinations in a prior 
    proceeding regarding the subject merchandise. SAA at 870. We reviewed 
    all information on the record including the petitioners' October 23, 
    1997 application for this anti-circumvention inquiry (see Memorandum 
    from Gary Taverman to Richard W. Moreland, dated December 8, 1997). We 
    have concluded that the application alleged each of the elements 
    required by 781(a) of the Act and was accompanied by supporting data, 
    and continues to be of probative value.
    
    Barilla's Certification Proposal
    
        The scope of the antidumping duty order on pasta excluded pasta in 
    packages of greater than five pounds. Our affirmative preliminary 
    determination in this proceeding is that circumvention of the order is 
    occurring by reason of imports of bulk pasta produced in Italy by 
    Barilla which are subsequently repackaged in the United States into 
    packages of five pounds or less for sale in the United States. This 
    anti-circumvention inquiry, initiated pursuant to section 781(a) of the 
    Act with respect to merchandise completed or assembled in the United 
    States, is not intended to examine bulk pasta produced by Barilla, 
    imported into the United States, and resold in bulk quantities within 
    the United States because imports of bulk pasta into the United States 
    for resale as bulk pasta would not constitute circumvention of the 
    antidumping duty order.
        As discussed in the Background section above, Barilla requested 
    that the Department implement a certification scheme whereby each of 
    its independent distributors would certify that it would resell all 
    pasta purchased from Barilla in the packaging in which the pasta was 
    delivered to it, and would not repack any pasta from packages greater 
    than five pounds into packages of five pounds or less. According to 
    Barilla, this scheme would enable the Department to exclude bulk pasta 
    that was not destined for repackaging after importation, e.g., bulk 
    pasta shipped directly to institutional or food service users, from the 
    scope of the antidumping duty order.
        For our final circumvention determination, we will allow Barilla an 
    additional opportunity to provide the Department with information 
    necessary to distinguish its exports of bulk pasta for repackaging in 
    the United States from those imported for sale as bulk pasta. If 
    Barilla provides sufficient relevant information, we will consider the 
    certification scheme it proposed. In doing so, we will consult with the 
    U.S. Customs Service to determine the effectiveness of this scheme and 
    of alternative proposals.
    
    Suspension of Liquidation
    
        In accordance with section 773(d) of the Act, the Department is 
    directing the Customs Service to suspend liquidation of all entries of 
    bulk pasta from Italy produced by Barilla that were entered, or 
    withdrawn from warehouse, for consumption on or after December 8, 1997, 
    the date of initiation of this anti-circumvention inquiry.
        The merchandise subject to suspension of liquidation is pasta in 
    packages of greater than five pounds as defined in the ``Scope of the 
    Anti-circumvention Inquiry'' section of this notice. The U.S. Customs 
    Service shall require a cash deposit in the amount of 11.26 percent for 
    all such unliquidated entries.
        This suspension of liquidation will remain in effect until further 
    notice.
    
    Notification of the International Trade Commission
    
        The Department, consistent with section 781(e) of the Act, will 
    notify the ITC of this preliminary determination to include the 
    merchandise subject to this inquiry within the antidumping duty order 
    on certain pasta from Italy. Pursuant to section 781(e) of the Act, the 
    ITC may request consultations concerning the Department's proposed 
    inclusion of the subject merchandise. If, after consultations, the ITC 
    believes that a significant injury issue is presented by the proposed 
    inclusion, the ITC may provide written advice to the Department. In 
    such a case, the ITC will have 60 days to provide written advice to the 
    Department.
    
    Public Comment
    
        Interested parties may request disclosure within five days of the 
    date of publication of this determination, and may request a hearing 
    within 10 days of publication. Case briefs and/or written comments from 
    interested parties may be submitted no later than 20 days from the 
    publication of this notice. Rebuttal briefs and rebuttals to comments, 
    limited to issues raised in those briefs or comments, may be filed no 
    later than 27 days after publication of this notice. Any hearing, if 
    requested, will be held no later than 34 days after publication of this 
    notice. The Department will publish the final determination with 
    respect to this anti-circumvention inquiry, including the results of 
    its analysis of any written comments.
        This affirmative preliminary circumvention determination is in 
    accordance with section 781(a) of the Act and 19 CFR 351.225 of the 
    Department's regulations.
    
        Dated: April 7, 1998.
    Robert S. LaRussa,
    Assistant Secretary for Import Administration.
    [FR Doc. 98-9869 Filed 3-14-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 3510-DS-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/15/1998
Published:
04/15/1998
Department:
International Trade Administration
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of Affirmative Preliminary Determination of Circumvention of Antidumping Duty Order.
Document Number:
98-9869
Dates:
April 15, 1998.
Pages:
18364-18366 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
A-475-818
PDF File:
98-9869.pdf